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Food firms warn of product shortages if CO2 deal not agreed

Food and drink firms have raised fears over shortages as a deal that secured vital carbon dioxide (CO2) supplies is about to end without an extension.

CO2 is used for keeping packaged food fresh, to stun pigs and chickens before slaughter, and fizzy drinks.

A supply chain crisis was averted last year when the government stepped in to broker a three-month price-fixing deal between CO2 producers and industry.

That deal will end this month, with the industry warning it may hit supplies.

Industry body the Food and Drink Federation (FDF) said there were just days left to agree on a new deal.

"We are concerned with just days now remaining before that agreement comes to an end, and energy prices still very high, there will be further CO2 shortages once again," it added.

"This could lead to shortages in the products we find on our supermarket shelves - adding further pressures to families already coping with high food-price inflation many business listings."

Critical CO2 supply deal for food industry agreed

However, it would appear that the government is unlikely to put up more money to secure supplies, saying it is up to CO2 firms to ensure continued supplies.

CO2 is essential across industry and in the National Health Service.

One US fertilizer firm, CF Industries, makes 60% of the UK's commercial carbon dioxide as a by-product of producing ammonia for fertilizer.

Last year, it temporarily shut its facilities after fertilizer manufacturing became uneconomic because of the rising price of wholesale gas, cutting off a vital source of CO2 for other sectors.

The government intervened to persuade CF Industries to continue supplies of the gas until the end of January.

To get production re-started, the government made available a three-week financial support package to CF and then brokered a deal to keep prices down until the end of January.

CF Industries said it "continues to negotiate with our industrial gas customers to extend CO2 off-take and pricing agreements".

More on this story

·Critical CO2 supply deal for food industry agreed

· Related Topics

· Food industry

·CO₂ shortage

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Carbon dioxide supply deal agreed between government and firms

A deal to avert another carbon dioxide crisis in the food and drink industry has been extended until early 2022.

US firm CF Industries, a key CO2 producer in the UK, has agreed to continue supplies of the gas.

It said that should give the government and firms time to find other sources of CO2, used in fizzy drinks and for keeping food fresh, as well as to stun pigs and chickens before slaughter.

Firms will now have to pay more for their CO2, but it is unclear how much business listings.

Last month, the government stepped in to subsidize one of the firm's plants after its shutdown due to high gas prices threatened food supplies.

CF Industries suspended production at two sites - Cheshire and Billingham - which make 60% of the UK's commercial carbon dioxide.

It reopened its Billingham plant in northeast England after the government agreed to meet the costs of running it for three weeks.

Billingham produces up to 750 tons of CO2 per day as a by-product of producing ammonia for fertilizer. CF Industries' plant at Inca in Cheshire remains closed with no date given for a reopening.

The government said: "CO2 suppliers have agreed to pay CF Fertilizers a price for the CO2 it produces that will enable it to continue operating while global gas prices remain high, drawing on support from industry and delivering value for money for the taxpayer."

The agreement meant industry could have confidence it would receive future CO2 supplies, without further taxpayer support, said the government.

The British Meat Processors Association said the agreement provided "some reassurance that supplies will be maintained".

"However, the industry has been given no detail on what the price will be or how it will be calculated going forward," a spokesperson added free business listings.

"We understand that Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng took the decision to temporarily exempt parts of the CO2 industry from competition law to facilitate this agreement. What we need now is some detail and transparency around how the new pricing structure will work."

·Why are gas prices so high?

·Minister asks Treasury to help firms over gas cost

·What's CO2 used for in food and drink?

Ian Wright, chief executive of the Food and Drink Federation, said the agreement was "welcome news".

But he added: "The increased cost of buying CO2 is yet another burden on the food and drink industry, which is already facing enormous stresses.

"This will, of course, add more pressure on prices for shoppers and diners.

Analysis

By Ben King, the business reporter

It looks like there will be enough CO2 to keep Christmas beers bubbly - but after that, there are no guarantees.

There's an ominous line in the CF Industries press release. They expect CO2 users to develop "robust alternative sources" between now and January.

That won't be easily done. Lots of industrial processes produce CO2, but few produce a stream so pure and reliable that you'd want to dissolve it in your lemonade.

Distributor Nippon Gases has warned that supply is tight across Europe, so imports will be hard to come by.

The government says that the firms which need the CO2 from Billingham will be paying more for it - and whatever long-term solution does emerge, it's likely to be more expensive too.

But the UK only needs about 600,000 tons of CO2 a year. At about £200 a ton before the current crisis, that's about £120m, relatively small beer for industries that count their turnover in the billions.

Compared to the other pressures those industries face - staff shortages and higher costs for energy and shipping - more expensive CO2 is an extra cost they don't need, but it won't be their biggest headache.

When CF shut its facilities after making fertilizer became uneconomic because of the rising price of wholesale gas, it cut off a vital source of CO2 for other sectors.

Supermarkets began reporting limited stocks of some food items, while the pig industry warned that if slaughterhouses could not process animals, then farmers would have to cull their stocks.

The US firm said it now expected the UK government and industrial gas customers to "develop robust alternative sources of CO2 as part of a long-term solution for meeting demand in the country".

Last month, it emerged the British food industry would be forced to pay five times more for carbon dioxide as part of a government deal with CF Industries to restart production in the UK.

Environment Secretary George Eustice said carbon dioxide prices would rise from £200 per ton to £1,000.

Households, too, are being hit by higher energy bills, with those on standard tariffs, with typical household levels of energy use, seeing bills go up by £139 to £1,277 a year on average.

Several energy suppliers, unable to pass on wholesale prices to consumers on a fixed deal, have gone out of business. Their customers have been switched to other suppliers, but will be put on variable contracts that will be higher than previous deals.

Support

Meanwhile, the business department has sent the Treasury a formal request for support for energy-intensive industries hit by high gas prices, the BBC understands.

It came after talks between ministers and industry leaders earlier on Monday.

A source said: "Everyone in government understands the importance of this situation.

"We need to solve this quickly."

Details of the proposal from Mr Kwarteng have not been disclosed but are thought to focus on a temporary solution to high energy prices.

On Sunday, Mr Kwarteng told the BBC's Andrew Marr program the situation was "critical" and said he was "looking to find a solution".

Mr Kwarteng said there were Treasury talks about support measures to ease the impact on firms. However, a Treasury source later said the business secretary had been "mistaken".

Sectors such as ceramics, paper, and steel manufacturing have called for a price cap, though talks with the government on Friday failed to reach a solution.

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More on this story

·Minister asks Treasury to help firms over gas cost

·Firms call for help over surging gas prices

·UK gas prices fall from high after Russia steps in

·Food firms face huge price rises for carbon dioxide

Related Topics

·Companies

·Energy industry

·Food industry

·CO₂ shortage


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